The Journal of the Bihar Research Society, Volume 7 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 37
Page 11
... reasons to which I shall refer , A may marry e , and therefore e marry 4 , but the more general rule is that where there are only three groups , marriage occurs only according to the six rules I have formulated . It may perhaps assist ...
... reasons to which I shall refer , A may marry e , and therefore e marry 4 , but the more general rule is that where there are only three groups , marriage occurs only according to the six rules I have formulated . It may perhaps assist ...
Page 17
... reason to believe are associated with the Dravi- dian stratum of the population . While the two extremes thus differ in character , the groups which form the intermediate units in the hypergamous system also take an intermediate ...
... reason to believe are associated with the Dravi- dian stratum of the population . While the two extremes thus differ in character , the groups which form the intermediate units in the hypergamous system also take an intermediate ...
Page 18
... case of the hypergamy of the Central Provinces we have reason to believe that the immigrant Rajputs themselves practised hypergamy when they migrated and only carried the custom from 18 [ J.B.O.R.S ORIGIN OF HYPERGAMY .
... case of the hypergamy of the Central Provinces we have reason to believe that the immigrant Rajputs themselves practised hypergamy when they migrated and only carried the custom from 18 [ J.B.O.R.S ORIGIN OF HYPERGAMY .
Page 19
... reason to believe that interactions between people differing in culture have been of very frequent occurrence in human history and that the sentiment against unions of the women of a community with men of inferior status , either within ...
... reason to believe that interactions between people differing in culture have been of very frequent occurrence in human history and that the sentiment against unions of the women of a community with men of inferior status , either within ...
Page 24
... reason to believe that the old difference between immigrants and indigenous people still shows itself in the distinction between chief and commoner . Both among ourselves and in Polynesia there still remains in some measure the ancient ...
... reason to believe that the old difference between immigrants and indigenous people still shows itself in the distinction between chief and commoner . Both among ourselves and in Polynesia there still remains in some measure the ancient ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
äigō äiti babu Bahadur Sarat Chandra Bhai Bihar Bihar and Orissa Brahmans Calcutta caste Chaturaji CHIG Chota Nagpoor clan custom Dacca dādā Dastan elder brother's wife elder sister Elephant Emperor endogamy ERSITY UNIV Fareed Khan Father's guilds güngü history of Bengal Hon'ble Humayun Husband's elder hypergamy immigrant India indigenous inscription Islam Khan Jadunath Sarkar jagir Jātaka Jaunpur Kalinga Keshodas Ketumān Khurda king kinship Kshatriyas Kuch Kulin Lugu Lugu Baba Magadha Mangars marriage marry MIC MIC MIC UNIV MICHIS Mughals Muhammad Nambutiris nānā Nayars Orissa ORISSA RESEARCH SOCIETY Pahira's terms Patna pawn Pergunnah practice Pradyota Prasad Professor S. N. Mazumdar Provinces Puran Qasim Khan Raja Rajah Rajputs rank RSITY rule rupees Sarat Chandra Roy Sasaram Secretary sentiment Shah Jahan Shastri Sher Khan Sher Shah Singh sister's husband subahdars Sultan terms of relationship tion unions UNIV MIC UNIVE SITY villages Viśvavarman Wife's younger women younger sister's